What can these records tell me?

Depending on the type of record, transcripts may provide you with a combination of the following information:

Name

Year – transit year(s)

Departure date

Departure port

Arrival date

Voyage number

Ship name

Ship number

Remarks

Document ref - includes any/all descriptions for the images where your ancestor is found. Please note that in some cases, we do not have all or any of the images for a given entry.

Images may be able to provide you with additional information. Depending on the type of register or book your ancestor’s name is found in, you may learn details regarding their physical appearance and occupation. Description lists, for example, provide great detail into your ancestor’s physical description. Other records will include details about when and where your ancestor was convicted and the sentence given. Certain registers provide details about marital status, children, religion, and literacy.

In cases where multiple images related to your ancestor are found, we have included them in the image results. Use the next arrow on the right-hand side of the image viewer to browse all related images.

Discover more about these records

Tasmania, then part of New South Wales, was originally set up as a penal colony in 1803 by the British Empire. It was then called Van Diemen’s Land and it is estimated that some 75,000 convicts were shipped there up until 1853 when transportation ended. In 1856, following the passing of their constitution the year prior, the name was changed to Tasmania.

The influx of convicts created a very cheap labor pool, which was attractive to wealthy free settlers who came in droves during the 1820s. By 1830, Van Diemen’s Land was home to one-third of Australia’s total non-Indigenous population.

Tasmanian Archive and Heritage Office (TAHO) has provided this collection. The series included in this collection are as follows, with the start and end dates in parentheses:

CON13 Assignment lists and associated papers (1 January 1810 – 12 August 1859) – Assignment lists, or nominal lists, often include name, when and where convicted, and the sentence given.

CON14 Indents of male convicts (27 July 1824 – 26 May 1853) – Indents were volumes created to provide “pre-arrival” information before disembarkation. The information usually provided in these volumes is as follows: name, number, where and when convicted, the sentence given, trade, native place, details about physical appearance, and details about the crime and relatives. Entries dated after 1828 will often include information regarding a convict’s religion, children, and literacy. The volumes are arranged by ship’s name with each convict’s entry spanning two pages. The basis of information provided appears to have been copied over from the Assignment List with additional details being added after personal questioning on the convict.

CON15 Indents of female convicts (9 May 1831 – 24 February 1853)

CON16 Indents of convicts locally convicted or transported from other colonies (1 February 1835 – 30 November 1853)

CON18 Description lists of male convicts (1 January 1828 – 31 December 1853) – Before disembarkation, convicts were examined (both male and female convicts had to strip to the waist) and the following details were usually provided: age, height, complexion, hair, eyes and eyebrows, nose, mouth, forehead, chin, tattoos, scars or deformities, trade and native place.

CON27 Appropriation lists of convicts (1 January 1822 – 31 December 1846) – Appropriation lists were created for recording a convict’s trade and how a convict’s skills were used. The records may also include the name of the settler to whom a convict was assigned or the government department/group taking on the convict. Additional details may also be provided, such as age, native place, or sentence. The lists are arranged alphabetically by first letter of the last name.

CON31 Conduct registers of male convicts arriving in the period of the assignment system (1 January 1803 – 31 December 1843) – Included in these records are both details about the convict’s history before arrival (such as crime, trial details, sentence, marital status, and convict’s statement/confession) and details about the convict’s work in the colony after disembarkation (such as place of employment, master’s name, sentence, comments on good conduct, and grant of emancipation).

CON33 Conduct registers of male convicts arriving in the period of the probation system (1 January 1840 – 31 December 1853)

CON34 Conduct registers of male convicts arriving under the assignment system on strength in Nov 1844 (1 January 1844 – 31 December 1892)

CON35 Conduct registers of male convicts arriving under the assignment system on non-convict ships and on strength (meaning still within the convict system) in Nov 1844 (1 January 1844 – 31 December 1844)

CON36 Index to conduct register of male convicts arriving under the assignment system on non-convict ships and on strength in Nov 1844 (1 January 1844 – 31 December 1844)